Guest Post: An Archaeologist, an Anthropologist and an Anarchist Walk into a Bar… by Stuart Rathbone Source: https://thesebonesofmine.wordpress.com/2015/05/03/guest-post-an-archaeologist-an-anthropologist-and-an-anarchist-walk-into-a-bar-by-stuart-rathbone/ There are many different ways of classifying societies based for instance on levels of technology, on economic organisation, on the size of their area of influence and so on. A very fundamental scheme is to divide societies into those that are organised hierarchically and those which are organised anarchically, i.e. without a hierarchic class or power structure. Anarchic organisation has long been recognised but it took a surprisingly long time for anthropologists and archaeologists to develop a convincing understanding of them. The ‘segmented lineage systems’ that were the focus of research by the likes of Edward Evan Evans-Pritchard’s and Meyer Fortes between the 1930’s and 1950’s represent early attempts to understand how complex societies could exist without obvious hierarchical power structures (Evans-Pritchard 1940; Fortes 1945). Reading these accounts it becomes clear that a major problem was the frequent presence of defined leaders within societies that were not organised hierarchically........... Read More at https://thesebonesofmine.wordpress.com/2015/05/03/guest-post-an-archaeologist-an-anthropologist-and-an-anarchist-walk-into-a-bar-by-stuart-rathbone/














